Now the first
anniversary of my year – Shakespeare’s birthday – is approaching fast, and I
will probably not be able to commemorate it in any way I would like. As by
eating out with Claudia or putting up my own ”festival” as I did last year.
(Though I have a faint hope of something online – like some Shakespeare from
Digital Theatre, or maybe streaming “Twelfth Night” released by the National
Theatre - which probably won’t work as there will be hundreds of people
streaming … Thousands???) But I might celebrate anyway, in a different way, by
looking into READING. (And, very aptly - as I am still “under the influence” –
into theatre …)
Right in the
beginning, I unconsciously used the term READING as it is defined by common
use, as dealing with WRITTEN text. But this was just because of how I got
started, using my blog – and the idea of reading Shakespeare again – as
“therapy”. I thought I’d just start reading and then see what happened. It was
only by and by that I got into the habit of acquiring theatre productions and
film adaptations of the plays on DVD and watching them after having read the
text. Only then did I observe that I use the CONCEPT of reading, as it occurs naturally,
to describe how I engage with fictional text in an intense and complex way which
is basically the same when I am reading written fiction or am watching a film
or a staged play. In fact, the most basic object or activity or event in real
life as such is infinitely more complex than any text could ever be, but we are
accustomed to REDUCE their COMPLEXITY in order to deal with them. Reading,
instead, is an activity that encourages and ENHANCES COMPLEXITY by dealing with
text on different levels AT THE SAME TIME. Intellectually, by finding out what
happens in that story, which is often rather complicated, or why it happens,
and so on. Emotionally, by reacting to characters with empathy or repulsion. Sensually,
by automatically creating sensations and images, or reacting to the way they
are created with pleasure, distaste and so on. Ethically, by making judgements
on characters and their actions, and probably more … And this way of creating
complexity is what I experience as AESTHETICAL.
(Which, as I
just found out, is quite important because “aesthetical” is the fundamental
adjective referring to ART – and my natural understanding of aesthetical –
which is, of course, anything but new! – nonetheless defines art as something
profoundly “democratic”. I realize that what I am doing when I am reading is to
take the text out of the hands of the artist and use it AS MY OWN. This is also
the reason why I am totally not interested in “elitist” art – art which is DEFINED
by the personality of the artist. (Which doesn’t mean that I deny its existence
or importance!) And why I love the theatre so much more than I actually ”use”
it – because nothing can HAPPEN there without the audience becoming a part of
the performance. The inevitable corona update: Football premier league can
start again without people watching, as almost everybody is watching (and
paying!) on TV anyway, and an audience makes zero difference to the playing.
But – even if we could watch remotely! – reopening the theatres without letting
in the people makes no sense at all.)
The secret of
reading, therefore, is making something more complex than it is. And this
requires a SKILLED READER. A person that can not just decipher text and
determine its meaning, but somebody who is aesthetically skilled. Somebody who
LIKES to make things more complex than they are and knows how to do this. (The
last being, I think, what is commonly referred to as IMAGINATION. Fiction is
certainly not the only but the most comprehensive way of dealing with this
nagging feeling that there are ALWAYS more things in heaven and earth than are
dreamt of in our philosophy.) And it requires a TEXT that can be used in this
way.
In the fictional
universe, a TEXT is not just the written word but every object that can be used
aesthetically, as films, TV series, theatre productions, songs, paintings, even
instrumental music. The reason why I am never dealing with painting or music is
that I am not a skilled reader of these. I may happen to deal with them in a
significant way occasionally, being totally happy and fascinated with some
music I am hearing, or suddenly struck by a painting, as “everybody” is. But
this is over very fast, and I seldom think about it. I have no real skill in
dealing with them whereas, I think, I have become an exceptionally skilled
reader of written or spoken text and art featuring interpersonal relationships
a long time before I even knew it. I suspect the reason is that, unlike most
people, I have never taken either of these for granted but experienced them as
beautiful and enjoyable (where the written or spoken word is concerned) or
utterly scary and nightmarish. (The latter mostly when it comes to
interpersonal relationships. And I just realized – partly due to the corona
crisis – that I still do. How extremely cautiously I am still dealing with real
people, suspecting the madness and bullying to come out at any moment, though I
am never prepared for it when it does. I think, one of the first things I
learned, socially, is that I am the kind of person that will be disliked and
maltreated – and I still think it is something as important to remember as it
is to forget … I actually forgot! Must have been this film that reminded me? See
below …)
Obviously,
READING is the most important concept in this world I am investigating because
it describes its BOUNDARIES. Everything that is not reading, or somehow came
into my reading, has to stay outside. READER and TEXT are next, the first
dichotomy, basically without hierarchy because they are totally dependent on
each other. Without a text there are no readers, only people, and without a
person to read it there are only words but no text. As this is such a
commonplace statement that it is almost embarrassing to utter it – why do I
still find it so fascinating? I suppose because I never know HOW it begins. How
the two come together, or why. The only thing I know and can describe is WHEN
it has happened.
The READER
might appear to be the far more important concept in my blog because I am
constantly writing about them – especially about ME as a reader. It appears
that this is what it is all about – all I can write about with authority: what
happens to me when I am reading. But the text is so much more fascinating and
mysterious. As a reader, I only BECOME interesting when I am dealing with a
beautiful and fascinating – or fascinatingly nightmarish - text and am
experiencing the change it brings about in me. As regards content, the text is
so much more important than I am. It is the “thing” I absolutely need, the
thing I worship, the thing without which I – as a genuine (= not dull and
bullshitting) human being – cannot survive. But what is this thing?
Maybe the
most important part is to understand – as in Socrates – that I don’t know. The
only thing I know about a fictional text is that it is never just words, words,
words … Maybe “What?” is even the wrong question because it should in fact be “When?”.
As it starts to be a fictional text WHEN it transcends words. But how do I KNOW
when? How do I know that I can begin to deal with something I read or see in a
complex, aesthetical way?
I so wish
that I could remember my first time. When I got told a story and realized that
is was a STORY. I guess that there must be something like GOING THROUGH A DOOR
involved. To OPEN a book, the sensation when a curtain is raised … that is how
we LEARN what a fictional text is. (When we have learned it we are able to make
guesses, I suppose, and will recognize it even in unlikely places.) Actually,
the first natural way I have observed with children to appreciate and use
fiction is in fact some kind of THEATRE. A curtain is raised and Kasperl and
Gretel (or Judy and Punch) appear. It is a way of initiation, and other nations
have different ways. In fact, a glove puppet is more than enough to get any
small child totally excited. And I remember my baby niece visiting for the
first time and instantly inspecting the content of my bookshelves that didn’t even
have any pictures. (Actually, as I know her, mostly as a means of reassuring
herself, and making sense of ME: Oh, this aunt is something like my mother, she
READS!)
And I might
just have found out why it is THEATRE. Why theatre is this ideal place to set
up a fictional situation. As usual, there was a really long “run up” to get
there.
Which I
started far back in the past, but the finding out began with the elder of my two
sisters calling recently. When we were done talking about the corona situation,
she told me that she had seen “Joker” and had been totally fascinated with the
film, the actor and, obviously, the (actor as a) man. I was pleased as I knew I
could get the film the next day at Müller Markt (the German equivalent of Boots
which is also the only chain store in Germany where they sell music and DVDs on
a big scale). I bought it and watched it and was fascinated. I told my sister I
would send her a text when I had seen it, rating my reaction to the film, the
actor and the man on a scale of one to ten. That was a joke – it eludes me how
people rate ANYTHING on a scale from one to ten, but I did something similar.
I send her two thumbs up about the film – which is fascinating, (though I was
bored in the beginning and only got fascinated during the last quarter, where
there is this bit about tragedy and comedy – saying exactly what I said in my
last post, only so much more perspicaciously and radically.) I gave the actor
one thumb up – solely because - as, in this case, the actor practically IS the
film and the film is great - I had to ASSUME that Joachim Phoenix must be a
good actor. (I should have been reassured about this by him winning an Oscar,
of course, but I never am.) The thing is that I couldn’t TELL. In fact, I had
been bored with the much bigger half of the film and only fully noticed what an
interesting film it is when I was done watching ( – which sounds absurd but happens
regularly to me. It is the reason why I almost never stop watching when I am
bored. I know from experience that I might be bored because I don’t (yet)
understand what the film is about. And the films that I don’t understand at first
are the most likely to tell me something new or show me something in a new
light.). The reason I had been bored was exactly THIS: That I couldn’t tell. I
couldn’t tell if I liked what the actor was doing. And that bothered me … more
so as I have now positive proof that it has nothing to do with my rating of him
as a man – where I must have disappointed my sister giving him two thumbs down.
The proof being what recently happened about Toby Jones and “Uncle Vanya” -
which made me aware that my finding somebody fascinating as an actor basically
has nothing to do with the fact that I find them sexy, or attractive as a
person. (“Basically” because, if I don’t, it might take so much longer until I
NOTICE that it might never happen.)
It bothered
me that I couldn’t tell about Joaquim Phoenix – having so much “independent”
proof. And this made me aware that this is something which happens all the
time. That is, it happens all the time IN FILMS whereas it never happens when I
am watching THEATRE. With theatre, I can always tell if an actor is good or
not. And quite often this even leads to unpleasantness – mostly when I am
actually IN the theatre watching. I am stressing this because I see theatre
productions much more often on DVD or in the cinema than actually in the
theatre because I cannot afford to travel to London or Stratford all the time.
And with recorded theatre this practically never happens: a lead actor being
more or less out of sorts. It just happens EVERY TIME I am actually IN the
theatre. And – though this has only been a few times lately – I guess that
means that it happens a lot. It happened when I saw “Macbeth” in Stratford, and
- even though I loved Chris Eccleston’s playing - I could see that he was only at
about sixty to eighty percent on that day (- which is still over fifty percent more
than most other actors!). And I definitely KNEW this when I finally saw him at
a hundred and thirty on DVD. (Still, if he wants to go on playing Shakespeare -
which I fervently hope! - he should really get used to learn his text WORD FOR
WORD, it actually helps!) It happened with “Antony and Cleopatra” at the
Olivier Theatre – where everybody was good on that day EXCEPT Ralph Fiennes –
whereas he WAS when I saw it again in the “Cinema”! And it happened recently when
the curtain was raised on “Uncle Vanya” and I became aware that Richard
Armitage was boring me … And - though I was appalled, especially in this case!
- in a way, I always come to love this kind of failure. I love it because it infallibly
leads to some important discovery. As “Uncle Vanya” could not be recorded,
there will be no direct comparison, but my most intense theatre experience – at
least until I saw James McAvoy recently as Cyrano – was the twenty or so seconds
when Richard Armitage entered the stage in “The Crucible” BEFORE he opened his
mouth to say anything and BEFORE he did anything at all, and when I KNEW
something extraordinary was going to happen. Compared with what DIDN’T happen
when I saw him at be beginning of “Uncle Vanya”, it is my stellar point of
reference for what I can always see in the theatre and so often cannot see in
films. In the theatre, I ALWAYS see if an actor is ACTING.
I don’t know
yet why this is so, but I suspect that I had actually been right about the
FOURTH WALL when I brought it up the first time in my blog. In the theatre, I
never just see characters in a story, I ALWAYS see actors acting at the same
time. And when I CANNOT see it, I know that there is something wrong. There is
nothing more irritating or dispiriting in the theatre than an actor who isn’t
acting. I believe the reason for this is that, in a stage situation, it is the
ACTING which creates the fourth wall. More precisely: the acting and NOTHING
ELSE. I love to hit on the “fourth wall” in films – when a speck of mud or drop
of water hit the camera – because I like it to become aware of a fictional
situation. It is also an indication that in films it is created in a different
way. That the way of going through a door into the fictional world is
different. There are important films without any significant acting – though I
usually love the other kind. I sometimes notice the use of music in the theatre
with pleasure – but I would never miss it. Whereas I desperately miss it in
films, except in the rare cases where the lack of a soundtrack is actually
compensated by the acting - as I noticed recently on behalf of “My Zoe”. Most
(conventional) films actually don’t WORK without their soundtrack, whereas in
the theatre only the actors – and especially the way they are INTERACTING - determine
what we are supposed to feel. There is this intense PHYSICALITY which somehow
never works like this in films where people get naked all the time, and have sex,
and it is never remotely like when actors just touch or just react physically
with one another on a stage. Of course actors love this: being so totally in
control of the fictional situation, getting in touch with their audience without
actually having to meet them, having this immediate power to guide us where
they want to. But it is also a heavy and exhausting responsibility, doing this
every single time over a period of weeks and months. Therefore I am always lenient
regarding this kind of failure, at least if it is temporary – but this is not
the point.
The point, in
this context, is that, watching theatre, I CANNOT start reading until I get
convinced that the actors ARE ACTING. In the theatre I cannot go through that
door into the fictional world unless the actors open it for me. And this happens
THE MOMENT I see them acting. The exciting twenty seconds in “The Crucible” and
the many agonizing minutes at the beginning of “Uncle Vanya” are positive proof
of something that is usually difficult to determine: if there is some quality
IN THE TEXT that actually turns the expectation of a fictional situation into a
fictional situation. It is one of these rare opportunities where I was able to
actually lay a finger on something that has to be there - independent of me as
a reader - and which I came to think of as the TEXT VORTEX.